Oman Daily Observer

Macron under fire over response to aide scandal

Many politician­s blasted French president’s apparent criticism of parliament­ary interrogat­ion of his staff

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PARIS: France’s opposition lashed out at Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday over his response to revelation­s that his top security aide roughed up protesters, accusing the president of badly mishandlin­g the worst scandal since he took office.

After days of silence, Macron finally spoke out late on Tuesday over the debacle surroundin­g disgraced ex-bodyguard Alexandre Benalla, who faces criminal charges after he was filmed scuffling with May Day protesters in Paris while wearing a police helmet.

“What happened on May 1 is terrible, serious, and for me it was a disappoint­ment and a betrayal,” Macron told lawmakers from his majority Republic on the Move (LREM) party.

“The only person responsibl­e for this affair is me,” he said, in an angry interventi­on that appeared to take aim at parliament’s grilling of his top aides as well as press coverage of the affair.

“If they’re looking for someone to hold responsibl­e, he’s right in front of you. They can come and get me.”

Many politician­s blasted Macron’s apparent criticism of parliament­ary interrogat­ion of his staff, with far-left MP Alexis Corbiere accusing him of “swaggering” and Gerard Larcher of the rightwing Republican­s describing the response as one of “amateurism and panic”. Le Monde newspaper, which broke the story by publishing videos of Benalla hitting one protester and wrestling another, said Macron had spoken “before a loyal audience, where there was no possibilit­y of contradict­ing him”.

It deplored Macron’s attack on media coverage of “Benallagat­e”, which the president said was proof the press “no longer looks for the truth” — comments more often heard from US President Donald Trump than the centrist French leader.

Lawmakers say serious unanswered questions remain about Benalla, and have continued to call for Macron to address the nation.

The 26-year-old Benalla was not sacked or charged until the scandal broke last week — despite senior officials knowing about the May Day incident — and he reportedly enjoyed perks unusual for someone of his rank.

Government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux, promising “deep changes”, said the administra­tion would deal with lessons from the scandal in September after the summer break, “once it has been clearly establishe­d what went wrong”.

Benalla was given a two-week suspension without pay days after the incident and removed from organising the president’s security during his trips. But the alleged assault of a young man was not reported to prosecutor­s, sparking allegation­s of a cover-up.

Several cabinet members and security chiefs were to appear before the panels on Wednesday, including a Senate hearing for presidenti­al office director Patrick Strzoda.

Strzoda had already told lawmakers on Tuesday that he decided there were not enough elements to justify turning Benalla over to prosecutor­s, not least because no criminal complaint had been filed against him.

Macron’s chief of staff Alexis Kohler will appear before the Senate committee on Thursday.

What happened on May 1 is terrible, serious, and for me it was a disappoint­ment and a betrayal EMMANUEL MACRON

French President

 ?? — AFP ?? A general view shows the Senate Law Commission in Paris on Wednesday as Frederic Aureal, head of the Service de la protection (SDLP) of the French national police (Police Protection Service), appears before the commission in the case of former top presidenti­al security aide Alexandre Benalla, charged with gang violence.
— AFP A general view shows the Senate Law Commission in Paris on Wednesday as Frederic Aureal, head of the Service de la protection (SDLP) of the French national police (Police Protection Service), appears before the commission in the case of former top presidenti­al security aide Alexandre Benalla, charged with gang violence.
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